This was previously tied to an older commit rev and not an actual release
version; and that old commit was causing connectivity issues due to improper
SSL support.
Since systemd version 230, it is required to have a machine-id file
prior to the startup of the container. If the file is empty, a transient
machine ID is generated by systemd-nspawn.
See systemd/systemd#3014 for more details on the matter.
This unbreaks all of the containers-* NixOS tests.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Cc: @edolstra
Closes: #15808
If /tmp and /nix are in different filesystems, this causes the `find`s
in the fixup phase to fail because of a stale file handle:
find: cannot get current directory: No such file or directory
[Breakage introduced in commit 5c4e00b6b7
("gst_all_1: 1.6.1 -> 1.8.0 (#14628)").]
The build is failing due to a Wayland test/example program
(<gst-plugins-bad>/tests/examples/waylandsink) being built with a gtk3
input without Wayland support (or detection is failing):
main.c:28:2: error: #error "Wayland is not supported in GTK+"
Fix it by explicitly disabling wayland; pass --enable-wayland=no to
configure.
This reverts commit 83406bc171, because
it broke the build.
x2goclient requires to be built with its top-level (hand coded) Makefile
(in accordance with upstream documentation). Invoking qmake directly on
the .pro file, without specifying a separate build tree, will overwrite
the Makefile and break the build.
For instance, there are no install rules in the .pro file. That exists
only in the Makefile.
This is the original pull request plus some commits from me to bring all
channels to the latest versions, because the fixed security
vulnerabilites might not be fixed in the dev version we had before.
I've tested the whole changeset on my Hydra at:
https://headcounter.org/hydra/eval/322006
Thanks to @srp for the initial commit and thus implicitly also for the
security notice.
Cc: @abbradar
With this update we need to rebase the nix_plugin_paths patch, which was
done by @srp and I took it from his comment at:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/15762#issuecomment-222230677
Other than that, using libjpeg from nixpkgs fails to link:
https://headcounter.org/hydra/build/1114273
Rather than just using versionAtLeast to check for >= version 52, we're
matching on the explicit version number. That way we can make sure that
we (try to) build with system libjpeg again so we can keep it out of the
overall Chromium build time.
Built and tested using the VM tests on my Hydra at:
https://headcounter.org/hydra/eval/322006
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
We're already on version 52, so there really is no need to keep all
those conditionals and old patches anymore.
Tested dropping the unconditional build_fixes_46.patch via the Chromium
VM tests.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
I'm not sure how the wrong hash ended up being there, but I've checked
the hash from three different machines (and networks) just to be sure I
didn't make a mistake.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Overview of updated versions:
stable: 50.0.2661.102 -> 51.0.2704.63
beta: 51.0.2704.47 -> 51.0.2704.63
I tried to update dev, but couldn't get it to compile, it was failing
with a "'isnan' was not declared in this scope.
As far as I can tell, at the moment the beta and stable channels are
on the same version.
The stable update addresses the following security issues:
* High CVE-2016-1672: Cross-origin bypass in extension bindings. Credit
to Mariusz Mlynski.
* High CVE-2016-1673: Cross-origin bypass in Blink. Credit to Mariusz
Mlynski.
* High CVE-2016-1674: Cross-origin bypass in extensions. Credit to Mariusz
Mlynski.
* High CVE-2016-1675: Cross-origin bypass in Blink. Credit to Mariusz
Mlynski.
* High CVE-2016-1676: Cross-origin bypass in extension bindings. Credit
to Rob Wu.
* Medium CVE-2016-1677: Type confusion in V8. Credit to Guang Gong of
Qihoo 360.
* High CVE-2016-1678: Heap overflow in V8. Credit to Christian Holler.
* High CVE-2016-1679: Heap use-after-free in V8 bindings. Credit to Rob Wu.
* High CVE-2016-1680: Heap use-after-free in Skia. Credit to Atte Kettunen
of OUSPG.
* High CVE-2016-1681: Heap overflow in PDFium. Credit to Aleksandar Nikolic
of Cisco Talos.
* Medium CVE-2016-1682: CSP bypass for ServiceWorker. Credit to
KingstonTime.
* Medium CVE-2016-1683: Out-of-bounds access in libxslt. Credit to Nicolas
Gregoire.
* Medium CVE-2016-1684: Integer overflow in libxslt. Credit to Nicolas
Gregoire.
* Medium CVE-2016-1685: Out-of-bounds read in PDFium. Credit to Ke Liu
of Tencent's Xuanwu LAB.
* Medium CVE-2016-1686: Out-of-bounds read in PDFium. Credit to Ke Liu
of Tencent's Xuanwu LAB.
* Medium CVE-2016-1687: Information leak in extensions. Credit to Rob Wu.
* Medium CVE-2016-1688: Out-of-bounds read in V8. Credit to Max Korenko.
* Medium CVE-2016-1689: Heap buffer overflow in media. Credit to Atte
Kettunen of OUSPG.
* Medium CVE-2016-1690: Heap use-after-free in Autofill. Credit to Rob Wu.
* Low CVE-2016-1691: Heap buffer-overflow in Skia. Credit to Atte Kettunen
of OUSPG.
* Low CVE-2016-1692: Limited cross-origin bypass in ServiceWorker. Credit
to Til Jasper Ullrich.
* Low CVE-2016-1693: HTTP Download of Software Removal Tool. Credit to
Khalil Zhani.
* Low CVE-2016-1694: HPKP pins removed on cache clearance. Credit to Ryan
Lester and Bryant Zadegan.
See: http://googlechromereleases.blogspot.com/2016/05/stable-channel-update_25.html